About André Orban

I was born on 14 November 1943 in Westerlo, province of Antwerp (Belgium).
I am a chemical engineer and I graduated in 1966 from the University
of Liège in Belgium, after
having completed a study on the thermal chlorination of methane. I made
my military service in Belgium and Germany as a reserve officer in the field artillery
of the Belgian Army and I retired from the
Army reserve on 1 January 2001 as a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Artillery of
the 1st Belgian Mechanized Division of the Euro Corps.

My civilian career started at Sabena
in Zaventem (now replaced by Brussels Airlines), where I spent two exciting months in the chemistry and metallurgy
laboratory before my military service (1966). I first had to find a way
to eliminate cockroaches in planes coming from African destinations, whose
maintenance was done at Sabena. Later, I wrote the first register of toxic
substances used at Sabena, a "Material Safety Data Sheet" before they became
legally compulsory.

After my duty period, I was hired by the largest Belgian chemical company,
Solvay,
where I worked in the research labs of Brussels/Neder-over-Heembeek for 9 years
(1968-1977): research on the synthesis of hexamethylene-diamine (monomer
for nylons) , and later polymerisation of vinyl fluoride and vinylidene
fluoride (monomers for high-performance fluorinated plastics); and finally
development of processing methods for PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride) and
technical service for this new super-plastic.

I was then transferred to The Solvay American Corporation in New York
as Assistant Manager Market Research and Development (1977-1978). The job
was very eclectic and could be considered as the one of a First Secretary
of the Solvay Embassy in New York. During that period, I followed lessons
on Industrial Marketing at New York University.

Then I came back to Brussels for another exciting job as product manager
for fluorinated plastics (1978-1990). Being responsible for Solef
PVDF, its derivatives and all the intermediate chemicals necessary
for its manufacture, in all the fields from research and production to
marketing and sales and daily management, I saw the product line develop
from 200 to 3000 tonnes per year, with a turnover of 30 million dollars
throughout the world. I also contributed to the introduction of other polymers:
ARYLEF polyarylate, IXEF
semi-aromatic polyamide, etc.

After 12 years, I went back to the R&D department of Solvay at Neder-over-Heembeek
to take the post of product manager for all the new polymers developed
by the company (1990-1993). Apparently this was a post for which I was
deemed suitable because of my past experience with PVDF. Thus EREF
PA/PP alloys and glass-reinforced
PVC compounds were introduced in the market. During these years from
1978 through 1993, I gave some lectures on engineering polymers to the students
in chemical engineering at Liège University.

In 1993, due to an internal reorganisation at Solvay, I was transferred
to the United Nations to take care of programmes of assistance to countries
in transition in Central and Eastern Europe in the field of chemical industry.
Hence I started working as an expert economist for the United Nations
Economic
Commission for Europe (UN-ECE) in Geneva
(Switzerland), first
in the Chemical Industry section of the Industry Division, and later in
the Enterprise Development
Section of the Trade Division. My main achievements were in the field
of environmental clean-up of soils polluted by chemicals in central and
eastern Europe and central Asia, which included the writing of a Compendium
of soil clean-up technologies and companies; and in chemical legislation,
which resulted in the publication of a CD-ROM called ChemLex, a
comparative databank of the chemical legislation in the 55 countries of
UN/ECE. During that period, I was living in Ferney-Voltaire
(France, near the Swiss
border), for which I created an Internet site. Yes, folks, you guessed
it: I crossed the border at least twice a day!

In July 1998, I started a new career at CEFIC
(the European Chemical Industry Council), working for its affiliate
Euro Chlor, where I am the
Manager of the Chlorinated Paraffins sector group and of the
European Chlorinated Solvents Association. Since 2005 I got the added responsibility of the European Sulphuric Acid Association.

I retired from Cefic and Euro Chlor on 31 December 2008. I then created my own company, A&T Chem Consult, to help chemical companies fulfil their obligations for the REACH regulation of the European Union.

From 1969 to 1974, I was auditor, and later secretary-treasurer of the
Brussels section of the Association of Engineers of Liège University.
In 1995-1997, I was Chairman of the Polling Board of the United Nations
Office in Geneva.

In 2001, I was nominated by the Belgian Government for a post of expert in the Solvents Technical Options Committee of the United Nations Environment Program. The purpose of this committee is to recommend alternatives for ozone-depleting solvents.

I am married to Teresa Stepien, of Poland, and I am the father of three children, Nathalie (1972), Anne-Sophie
(1974) and Thierry (1976).

Belgian honorific medals: Commander in the Order of
Leopold II, Officer in the Order of Leopold, Officer in
the Order of the Crown, bronze medal of the Belgian Red Cross.

My hobbies are photography, commercial airliners, genealogy, music (especially
opera), hikes through nature and the Internet. Some links at the bottom
of the page will send you to my web pages on these subjects.